BRANDkits.ai
Free tool

Color Blindness Simulator

See how your team colors appear to fans with different types of color vision deficiency — affects ~8% of men.

Normal Vision

Baseline

Trichromacy · ~92% of people

All three cone types functioning. Full color range visible.

#002855
#FFB81C
#F5F5F0

Deuteranopia

Red-green · ~6% of men

Missing M (green) cones. Most common form — reds and greens look similar.

#002554shifted
#E4CC27shifted
#F6F5F0shifted

Protanopia

Red-green · ~1% of men

Missing L (red) cones. Reds appear very dark; confused with black or brown.

#0C2C57shifted
#D3BA00shifted
#F6F5F0shifted

Tritanopia

Blue-yellow · ~0.01%

Missing S (blue) cones. Blues and greens confused; yellows and reds confused.

#00333Ashifted
#FFA49Eshifted
#F6F4F3shifted

Achromatopsia

No color · ~0.003%

No functional cone cells. Complete grayscale vision only.

#232323shifted
#BCBCBCshifted
#F5F5F5shifted

Most common risk: Deuteranopia

~6% of men can't distinguish red from green. If your primary and secondary colors look similar under deuteranopia, a meaningful portion of your fanbase can't tell them apart — or distinguish you from opponents with similar palettes.

How to design inclusively

  • Ensure at least one color pair is distinguishable in grayscale
  • Avoid red + green as your only two primary colors
  • Use lightness contrast — not just hue — as your main differentiator
  • Test jersey vs. opponent colors under deuteranopia